7 November 2014 RE: Draft Resolution on Sanctions for South Sudan

7 November 2014
RE: Draft Resolution on Sanctions for South Sudan
Dear United Nations Security Council Members,
We, as human rights and advocacy organizations working on South Sudan, commend the Council’s
dedicated attention to the crisis, including your most recent trip to South Sudan. As the conflict
looks set to intensify, it has become clear that the fighting will continue unless the calculations of
the warring parties are fundamentally altered. To that end, we urge you vote in favour of the draft
resolution on global targeted sanctions in front of the Council. We also suggest a complementary
arms embargo to limit the ability of both sides to wage war on their own people.
Asset freezes and travel bans should be imposed against those that continue to undermine the
peace process, obstruct humanitarian access, and perpetrate grave human rights abuses. Building
on sanctions designations already made by the United States, the European Union, and Canada,
the UN Security Council should establish its own list of individuals to target in close consultation
with the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) leading regional negotiations. Steps
must also be taken to ensure the global sanctions regime does not further impede the delivery of
humanitarian assistance or harm ordinary civilians in any way.
To ensure these measures have the desired impact, the Council should give the sanctions
committee a clear mandate and adequate resources to quickly investigate and make designations
against those that continue to undermine the peace process. Enhancing the capacity for
enforcement of the sanctions regime at the regional level should be given top priority, particularly
in Kenya, Uganda, and Ethiopia. Additionally, an empowered group of experts should be tasked with
tracking the flow of arms into the country and ensuring that any weapons, ammunition and other
military-grade equipment and technology sent to South Sudan for peacekeeping purposes are not
used to commit or facilitate serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law.
A globally and regionally enforced sanctions regime, including asset freezes and travel bans, would
restrict the ability of South Sudanese elites to fund and fuel this civil war. Please act today.
Sincerely,
The Enough Project
United to End Genocide
Voices for Sudan